Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 151, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 17, 1939 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE TWO
H
THE BORGER (TEXAS) DAILY HERALD
WEDNESDAY. MAY 17, 1939
3 r
THE BORGER DAILY HERALD
at IOS North Main Rtrett, Borgsr Tmss. Every Evening
fiseept Saturday, and on Sunday Morning by
PANHANDLE PUBLISHING, Inc.
PHILLIPS „ Editor nnd Publisher
Per
One
Week
Year
8UBSI KIPTON
By Carrier In
RATKS
Boi g«r
One Year
Six Month
Tliretj Months
lly Mull
t .15
$7.60
$7.50
$4.00
$2.10
fíntered uh second-clas mailer November 23. 1926 at the Post-
office ui Burger. T< xas, under the Act of ilnr<'li s. Is'aT.
The Associated Press in exclusively entitled 10 the une of re-
pUldUatidii of nil news dlsputchc credit In It or not nt herwiatt.
Any erroneous reflection upon ihe ettaractcr. standing or repu-
tation of any Individual, firm, concern or eorporatlun that may ap-
pear In the columns of the llttrtld will bu Kindly corrected when
called to the attention of the editor It In not tin- Intention of thin
newspaper to wrongly tine or Injure any Individual, firm, concern, or
corporation, and corrections will be made when warranted and
prominently as was wrongly published reference or article.
All unsolicited article*, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent I of
to the Herald are sent at the owner's rink, aud the publishers ex-'
pressly repudiate and liability ... lespouslblify tor their custody PS , 1IV ,,
ra, "■
UNEMPLOYMENT, THE PROBLEM
OVERSHADOWING ALL
Nothing, not wars or mmur.s of wars abroad, not
domestic party politics and bickerings, nothing is so im-
portant to th« United States as unemployment.
This is the central fact on which every thought ought
to center today. About 11,000,000 potential wage-earners
are unable to find Work, As long as this remains true, it
is wasted breath to tulk in terms of budget-balancing.
return to normalcy, and all sucn catchwords.
Yet there is no reason whatever to yield to despair.
This is a problem that will be faced and met by some
planned means or by some natural processes of develop-
ment not yet evident. But it must and will be met.
Many people fail to recognize the essence of the pro-
blem. The unemployed today represent almost exactly
the increase in the working population since 1929. Th.*re
are employed today in non-agricultural industries 3ft,0OQ,-
000 workers. In 1029, at the very peak of prosperity,
employment was only 35,300*000. In other words, a return
to "prosperity" of 1929 would scarcely make a dent
today's unemployment.
Employment today is 6,750,000 above the low of
March, 1933, and even 360,000 above March, 1938. In
creases like that only tend to get back to levels which must
be excesded if we are to have real prosperity. Neverthe
les , they do show progress.
Today there Is work for almost 7,000,000 more than
there was in 1933. But the working population has increas-
ed much faster. To have a 1929 level of prosperity, we
would have to employ today not 35,300,000 workers as
then, but perhaps 45,000,000.
This problem is common to all the world. Pointing
to Germany and Italy and saying "No unemployment
there," is no answer. Picture the result if the United States
suddenly clapped 2,000,000 men into the standing army,
stepped up industry and agriculture to feed and equip
these men, themselves suddenly withdrawn from produc-
tion. Two million would be about in proportion to the
1,000,000 Germany has constantly under arms. Three out
of four men thus enrolled would leave a vacant job behind.
to be filled by others, All industry, all agriculture would
feel the stimulus. Such a move might well "solve" unem-
ployment for us, as for much of Europe.
But such a "solution" is no solution. We do not want
it.
Brains, research, imagination, daring, vision, the
broadest kind of patriotism and devotion, good-will, deter-
mination, and faith that together we can work out our
problem—those are the things necessary u> the solution.
Those things America still has. Noffling must hamper
full play for these qualities, in which alone lies our sal-
vation.
m
They've built a fence around the goldfish pond in
rk, Chic
away?
Garfield park, Chicago. To keep the neighboring college
■Byg "" "
, FAMOUS AUTHOR
KOMZONTAL
1,5 Author of
"Pilgrim's
Progress.'
10 Drenches,
12 Indian.
'3 Ear nuncio
14 Conccnled.
16 To reppnt.
17 To feign
20 Type standard
21 Owner oí an
estate fee.
22 Sheltered
placo.
23 Unopened
flowers.
25 Brink.
■20 The shanit,
31 Peeled.
34 Branches
36 Abhorred
38 To soak flax.
38 Vampire.
40 To dine
42 Dusky.
43 Novel.
46 Pertaining to
the live:
40 Pronoun
81 Brond smile
53 Wall recess.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
HELEN
HAYES
54 Ancient.
55 Dolphinliuc
eréntute.
5" Afternoon
meal.
58 Sanskrit
«lia led.
50 Ho wns ——
by birth.
CO He ¡ .inks
among the
great
VERTICAL
2 ' k
3 tit>.n
a i uor,
4 Convent
teacher.
5 To exist.
<1 Theater guide,
1 To warble.
B In.
!' Bowed
11 Po.'.-esni;
flavor.
13 He was im-
prisoned for
unlawful
15 Neuter
pronoun.
18 To grate
harshly.
10 To require,
2i friction
match.
33¿Slill.
24 Introduction.
26 Ghastly.
27 Organ of
hearing
28 He was a
by trade.
.'to Sun fiod.
32 Men'Hi re
of area.
33 And.
35 Form of
37 Burmese
knife.
39 Thti
•II Five and five
42 To perish.
44 Ireland.
4.1 Organ of
aerial flight.
47 01st.
48 T.i melt.
-1!> Slmc bottom,
ftO Scalp
covering.
52 Nothing.
>4 Hendgcar,
3f> Sloth.
58 3.1416.
Legal Notice
j (STATION BV FCBLIOATIO*
¡JACK OAHTLANl' Plaintiff
v*
AKCFLIA HART|.A.\'D. Defendant
NO, :)'• 11
in tiii: s 4 t 11 íjiíütk if'r conn*,
in rt iiivKON coi'.vn tkxak
TIi Stole of Tenas ii> (he Sheriff
or :• / Conn:ii¡lie of lluieltlii
i sou <' < i it 111 > iillKKTINti
Vol' Mti: IlKHFIIY COM
MANDKD. iiiut iiy iniiuiii I III Ii
ji-.itlon oi this I'ltuthm In Home
new <paper published in the fonti
, t y uf II i| u 111 it no II nlii i 1 eiiel)
week fur lour consecutive Week*
previous tu lio return doy here-
of, you miiiiiiioii AliCKLIA CIAKT
1 LAND whose residence is tin
1 known, wlin N aliened to be a, non-
resident i if tile Stale Of Texas, til
lie iiii<| ,i|ipeur at ihe next rogiuir
j tei m nf the s lili District Court
IIu 1 ehíiihoii County, to lie hold
en >ai I lie Court House thereof, In
Hie City of Stinnett, on the Firm
\ I 19.1 . the
ime lielnn the fitli day of lune.
A Ii. 19:5 . then nnd there in an-
■ wer a petition filed In said Court
on the L'7th dty of April. A l>
193 , In a milt, nutnhorort on the
Docket of said Court. \'o. í 1 fi
wherein ,IACK (1ARTLAÑU. I«
plaintiff, and AHCKI.IA CART
I,AND Ih deiendntii. the nature I
of plaintiff demand beinit m>h- i
Htiiitttally, as followt, to-wlt Pe-
tition for a IXvoree. wherein the
plaintiff «ays that !ie and defend-
ant married on the inih day oi
.lantmry, 1983. and lived together I
thereatter uh Itushnnd and wife j
until, on or about the 5th dtty or
Oetolmr, A. O. 1937 Plaintiff «ny«
thttt. durlflg which time he was at i
all times kind and ••miHlderate of
and to said defendant, and did
all iliat tie eoold to make their
man-led life a trappy one Init not
withstanding hltt effort# said de-
fendant would leave this plaintiff
for many days at a time without
luforniitiK said plaintiff of her
whereabout , and ftnally on or
about I he 6th day of October,
103 7, left tlita pl'alutlff without
any cause or provocation on his
part, and told him she did not !
love lilm and was not going to
live with him any longer.
HKRBIN FAIL NOT. hut have
you before said Court on the said
first day ot next term-thereof ihis
writ with your return thereon,
showing how you have excel tied
the same.
Given under my hand and seal
of said Court, at office in the
City of Stinnett. Texas, this tile
27th day of April. A. D. 193.1.
(9KAL)
WITNESS.
W. L. KELLKY
Clerk of 84th Riatrict Court
In and for Hutchinson Coun-
ty. Texas.
May 3, 10, 17. 24
KING GEORGE
(Coutinued from rt ge ONlfi)
parliament later was io ratify In
giving us the federative eharier."
ol IstiT Mild declared
"Thlf i nt4l e eh> ilsl) In our
lit'Ji'ts. aud never «hall v.e <eune
to consider ill. ihnine as i lit IiiiU
wark nf our lieinocrutle Jtiatltu-
lions .<nil our eonsiiiutionnl llli-
ertles "
ililplrsxiti iiinike ill Freneh
JIM FARLEY IS
ENTERTAINED IN
WESTERN STYLE
CITY MOVES TO
(Continued from Pug* PNB)
tin
11
klnv
and
Inu-
tile Hil OK
Ii paid i riba it
• French.Cane
pled in
RUnte. The molían
to the loya!t> of ;hi
dlan people.
i "The spirit el 11 utira ace In which
¡lile i^w o «leal racen lot i'auad'.i I
¡ dwell side by aide in MiIm province
¡ an example
' King lleorgi
i tunny augtirs
ot Cauiida
tlx
well
• ii11 re world."
"TIi is har.
for the I ni Ule
COLONEL and Mrs. Don C. Hall,
pictured above, are admiring
"The Road of Tomorrow" at the
Ford Ex position at the Now York
World's Fair and calculating on
how they might fare aa hitch-hikers
on it. The Colonel and his wife,
each 72-years old, know something
about hitch-hikhig; they estimate
they have traveled some 84,000
miles In the last two and a half
years by rule ot thumb and their
current visit to the Fair Is tho end
of a hitch-hiking junket from their
home in Mokena. Illinois. They
left there April 36. Tho couple.
who used to be on the stage, have
visited every World's Fair In rhls
country since the 1893 Fair in cnl-
cago. Col. Hall writes his impies-
slons of the Fairs for his home-
town newspaper, tho Mokena News-
Bulletin. (The Colonel needn't have
wondered about hitch-hiking on
"The Road, of Tomorrow." All Ford
Exposition*visitors are driven over
this elevated highway free of charge
In Ford. Mercury and Lincoln-
Zephyr cars. The roadway winds
for more than half a mile through
and around the Ford building and
grounds.)
ARAB-RULED
(Continued ftoni pago ONE)
added:
"His Majesty's government
are satisfied dial when the im-
migration over the five years
which 1b now contemplated has
taken place Ihey wi'l not be
justified Iti facilitating, nor will
they be under any ohlleallon to
I actiltate. tho further develop-
ment of the Jewish National
home by Immigration.
1
. m
J
3fl
17
«*•■* mum
Legal Notice
CITATION HV IU B1JCATION
FANNIN HICARDEN, Plaintiff
vs.
WAYNE BEARDBN. Defendant
No, ax(2
IN THE 84TH DISTRICT COURT,
HUTCHINSON COCNTY, TEXAS
The Stale of Texus to the Sheriff
or Constable of Hutchinson Co-
unty -GREETING:
YOU ARE HEREBY COM
MANDED, that ny making publi-
cation of this Citation in some
newspaper published In the Coun-
ty of Hutchinson once In each
week for four consecutive weeks
previous to the return day here-
of, you summon WAYNE BEAR-
DION whose residence is unknown,
who 1 alleged to tie u non-resident
of the State of Texas, to be and
appear at the next regular term
of the 84th District Court of Hut-
chinson County, to be holden at
the Court House thereof, in the
City of Stinnett, on the First Mon-
day in June A D. 1939, the same
being the 5th day of June, A. D.
1939. then and there to answer
a petition filed in said Court on
the C71b day of April, A D. 1939,
In u suit, numbered on the Doc-
ket of s«Id Court, No. 38X2 where-
in FANNIE BEARDBN, Is plain-
tiff, and WAYNE BEARDBN. is
defendant: the nature of plain-
tiff'# demand being substantially,
as follows, to-wlt: .Suit for divorce
and control and custody of min-
or children. Plaintiff alleges thut
she und defendant were legally
married on the 18th day of April,
1934, and separated on the 1st
day of January, 1939. Plaintiff
further says that during the time
that she and defendant lived to-
gether us husband nnd wife, that
she conducted herself with propri-
ety, was a kind and loving wife
and mother, but not withstanding
her efforts, roon after she mid de-
fendant began a course of unkind
and cruel treatment 'towards this
plaintiff, thttt continually grew
worse until by reason of aaid
treatment plaintiff was forced to
leave said defendant for said
treatment hud caused this plain-
tiff serious bodily Injury.
HERRIN FAIL NOT. but have
you before said Court on the said
first day of next term thereof this
writ with your return thereon,
showing how you have executed
the same.
Given under my hand and seal
of Mid Court, at offtee In the Oily
of Stinnett. Text *, this the 27th
day of April. A. D. 1939.
(SEAL)
WITNH88,
"vk'ES-
MAJOR
(Continued rrom pago ONE)
ailment," lie told Ills col-
leagues.
To a statement of Rep, E. H.
Thornton. Jr.. cf Galveston, ap-
propriations committee chair-
man thai the department made
no rc(|uem for the increases nup-
plies, Finer replied "they didn't
ask for it because they knew
[hey wouldn't ret H "
Also approved were amend- '
meats boosting salary of the
labor commission from $3.000 |
to Í3.600; hiking the pay of an
inspector in the markets and '
1 warehouse dlvisicii or the agri-
culture department from ¡M.800
to $2,000°, providing for an ad-
iltloual stenographer at $1.350 j
aud racing the appropriation for'
the board of hairdressers and ¡
cosmetologists .and raising the
pay of the director of the bu- |
reuu of lood und durgs In the '
health department from $8,4un
to $2,750
The house lopped oil' If 120 of
the bill's ♦1,921 salary for
bookkeepers and bond clerks for
ihe board of county and district
road Indebtedness. Rejected was
an amendment to boost the sal-
ary of parole board member*
from $3,000 to $-1,1100.
Meanwhile the senate look
notice of the pension iiuestloii
when the powerful state affairs
committee received from a sub-
group the gross receipts tax hill
passed several weeks ago Iiy lite
house The bill had lain buriel
in the sub-committee while Ih'-
Upper branch awaited prOfcres<
of Its constitutional amendment
resolution across the corridor
The committee, however, ad
journed iniinedla'tely alter re-
ceiving the bill and made no
attempt to vote on U Sub-group
members said they had made
changes "deemed necessary" bu
had not done a "great deal of
work on the bill."
Among the alterations were:
Elimination ol exemptions
from the house bill
Chang ' the tax ironi one to
throe-,i'ourt lis of one per cent
on retail sales and leave un-
changed the- one-fourth of one
per cent tax on whelesal
t-elpts.
SEA SCOUTS OUTWARD BOUND
OPBN water cruising, under the SUpper'a competer.t leadership (iniet).
to pert of the fun every SEA SCOUT
i Boy Scouts of America, 15 years or old
0, one ot the Senior Scout programs o! the
AM ARILLO lev, May
I i/p) Jim Farley «mis in town
i today t< ride a h< i . dedicate -i
poatoífice. sei I."tie cowhand
j ride herd on asphalt. «1*1 two
I nil III 'c meals. go-*s||i Willi Pan
| handle postmasters and be ln-
jierviewid all ill five hours
The poatiiiiit-'.er-general was
most interested in ibe largest
ii muda oi horsi;*' corraled in Hi '
plains cow country ince the
days of •..'¡Id masiaun drive#
a-toss tlii panhandle prairies
i t'i. whit lids oft the ranges ot
j Texas. New Mexico and Okla-
hoitiu were in the large delaten
j lions which greeted Farley on
Ills arrival at 1 a in. tCSTl
The postmaster was rushed im
me< itUely to the first of his
whirlwind activities here a
hregk fast.
The cowboys hud been asuem-
bUug their hotwes sinoe Monday
tor the Farley parade, described
by Miimoii King, old-time ranch
man and bar ic! iti uing. as tie
longest cowhand parade ever
staged."
('elected as the only "$1,000
cowpony" til tile plains, area
wns 'Dynamite," a white ,\i <
iiliin ft nr-guiicd animal.
FDR's Aids Differ
Cn Farm Hill Vote
U .VSIHNtiTUN. Al,;. I V i/V,
Mi allien of I'tviddeiit Roose-
velt's i fftclal I'm,illy were re
P> i lid on capítol till' today to be
Offering llim cniifli iiujr aifvlce
on wlietiu to sign cr veto the
$ ! ,2 1 X.Oli '.OOO agricultlli.il de
partmetii hill
The prt ddeni's ;n'ifl!tiiiii.iry
dSscnwüiotiH ol the record-break-
ing appioprlalii n measure, it
was said anthorimtfvelv l.ive
been na i it nit the p.isrjliilffy the
house wll Ian pi most > f the
S3s.'t.auo,una added by the sen.
ate.
^;>(¡¡.í, r;
the
IN
part of the fun every SEA SCOUT anticipates. Any n
* Scouts of America. 15 years or older, may enjoy SEA
, may enjoy
he Boy. Scot
member of
SCOUT-
uts of America.
Uorgf r Dally
j Ads gel resalís
Herald Classified
UNIVERSAL
(Continued from Cage ONE)
fíate us a whole.
P.iotu ,ion w is thrown aboit'
thooaitared pc-ccary of South Tex.
as Willi a .new law declaring il a
wine animal. The open season
on thin tiative Amerii iti wild hog
will be iroin Nov Hi to Jan. 1
nd the : eusoti limit for each
hurtei will he two
The current legislature prohlb
Red killing i lirown pellcati'-
1 lit tf.c.k the ¡rtafíitig off the pro-
tested list
Only 22 of the stale's 2o l coun-
ties now requlr resident anglers
using natural bait- and resident
hunters to buy licenses. The list
thus fm has not been changed iiy
ill present Ii xisluture
The drive to Impose universal
Uet'iiHes has been under way for
in any years. Some rportstneti say
that is the only way in which Kilf-
fteient revenues can be obtained
to maintain a plentiful supply ot
game and fish In Texas. The in.
crease in tho license for hunters
of big ««me will boost revenue#
somewhat bul not nearly as much
re- j as the state game and fish depart-
ment had hoped for.
Hike from one-tenth to one-
fourth of one per cent the tax
on gross Income of all persons
engaged In money let..'ling
Addition of a three-fourths of
one per cent tax on gross cash
receipts from printing, publish-
ing and advertising, a levy not
contained in the house bill.
GOOD CROPS
(Continúen lrom Pwge ONE)
ENGLAND TO BAR
(Continued flora Pwge ONE)
Mercantile Company
Strawn, In Palo Pinto county
suffered more than $"> 00o dam-
age Hall punched holes in roofs
and damaged a s boo'. The hall
and rain poured Into residences
and flooded several business
houses.
The St ra wn area w ft one of
the few reporting crops were
damaged.
Hall injured the grain pros-
pects there.
In trf.ngview. a 2.11 Inches
rainfall broke a several-weeks' j States,
drought which bad hampered '• '1"v<
farm and garden operations, i about
Possibility of more rain, bow.;
ever, was not looked upon fav.
orubly.
Tb-< harvest raJnr were report
ed at Weatherford, where 8,14
inches fell yéliPiaiy.
Carrnlton recorded 2.9K Inch-
es; Tyler, 1.92; Abilene. 1.1 S:
Corslcnnn. .81; llalla#, .76;
Sherman. .68; Fort Worth, .61;
Waco. 78; Austin, ,2«: (¡«Ives
ton. .04; Houston, .06; and Sim
Antonio, a trace.
especlafty against giving such ail-
i> • ■.
It investors in s#i on buying;
American seen titles II is expected
brokers will remind them of the
chancellor of the exchequer's
statefnetit aud reserve the right to
refuse io handle the tranHaetinn
London newspapers today con.
tinned to print lists or American
stock limitations.
London financial circles also
said an Unofficial request Io desist
frem quoting Transatiantle (Cult-
ad siatis airaroni had been sent
to brokers hy the fjank of Klngtund
In the form of a note ealilng at-
tention to Sir John's statement.
The chancellor of the exchequer
told commons yesterday he had
asked one Insurance company to
et.iae l.-.sulng a circular advocat-
ing aetidim. of funds io the Unlled
Evidence That Scouts Are Cheerful
law "A Scout is Cheerful" means just that for Set Sctuts too
■si m .-. «• i
fair westher ahead. Who wouldn't be hai
These lads (Scouts past their 15th birthday) see smooth sailing and
adventure u the
fair westher ahead, who wouldn't be happy
promise in the offing? SEA SCOUTINO is
of the Boy Scouts of America.
when
one of the senior programs
DENMARK
(Continued from page ONE)
t.ikel! definite steps
and 1 think they will lie
effective.' he said.
April 20 Sir John said ''the good
sense of investors will ludiente to
them that the isport of eupital at
the preiicnf time when the require-
ments of national defense me ,<o
great would be deleterious to the
national interest,"
TIH\1, CONTI NIK* IH
•M HOi: HAM TUiNM
he especially anxious were:
1. Will Germany demand u
p'ebiscite in north S hleswig be-
fcre signing a pact on the
grounds that the presttt frontier
was fixed Iiy the Maty of Ver-
sailles, which Hitler has solem-
nly denounced?
:: Will Germany demand the
light to prescribe so Denmark
Ik w the affairs of the German
m.uorliy In Denmark shall be
nd ministered
If either answer ii affirma-
tive, Danes said, tho proppsed
HonagrcKsion pad will not mat
"tiltUKe
BAND DIRECTOR
(CoTittuued from Pago ONE)
(outbwest part of the «Iiy,
I ronvillc said tin fair aasoda
hoc would lijve l" "ave this .laud
as the .-lie nt lite fair and pos.
,-liiic buildings >itis full, «sin -i
the oici pass en Highway II
will cut through the present fan
urea west ol the road.
i ,
Tlit4 rommH«lou to
await i he actloli of tl"' n\\lmin-
Ing pool lieurd mentlng tonight
before making decision,
•I lie tody also, defot?|'ed until
ih<' ncords lould be checked a
request by Marvin Hammer. Suu-
day school siiperlnticndent of the
Met lit.dial Churuti and church
playgn uuds comn.fttecman. that
the <-ii\ exempt the church's play-
ground property irom tniuiliiiu
The laud lies behind the Metbo-
dlsi Church The commission de
elded to work toward «oiUcmuui
of the problem niter -hocking
the tiii and block numbers nnd
d« cd a
At the sut{ges.ki||i of Mayor
L. M Davis, City Manager Mai.
th< '.is and Commissioners itar
ne.y Andress and s M Clayton
weri ij.lined a>, committee to
investigate the proposed cliaug
K in city hail office qua iters up-
stairs.
H. N, Prueit. Chamber of
Commerce secretary. requested
thai ills org a n (gallon take over
the present W IV A. and the
Mayer's <iffle#s across the hal|
lit,tb his roon. to provide more
¡'in e. The W '. ' would move
Info the old Chamber of Com-
merce office.
t tnler pioposei. plans, when
the library hiOvoí itito Its new
■nillti a-<: iii lied c <,• - "baptnr
,.! :i ni nld in- civi -i more room.
Fi; and 1*0*11 e chief J II.
Mil'cr llillliuttleli II I I port euv
I I III: police ||..I i l l frvlll April
through Muy l.'i. as ruquesl
ed iiy commission He n-porti^l
lile po.i ■ departnu ni had taken
la .tppro^iiiiiti-fy fir,i in finés
I '>lli 11 ■ ii .vero fined fm ovei
(•..rkitia. ol o ceo dismissed.
Matthew, reported Dial |): k
M. \ 'v ,n i lie Jhm meet.
| Inj. ppea red ÉÉftn; the , otu-
i l. ■ 'el i'p ■ soiling Jhe Clii^Jl
'wr i! i *, in ii; «-i i vjji parkiiug.
j ii Id hil:: ho i liani. had received
¡ no fii' tber complaints oil the
! ovi riiarlUug ordluunee.
.dallbev. a ill. City Attorney
Aym Wfinh vat oil us ihclr optn-
¡011 l.'io c31, y : to ni PI keep the 'ols
between ilie ihrary ,md ihe <j(W
IIHll Them lots had teen .-«ub
gested a:, puytuvnt to Hie Kern-
dale Motor ' 'c in pa |l y f'<r lots it
had d eded to tie ■ «unly for
creiilmi oi' iIhi hraiuib library
in lit:.i block, according to the
term ■ of :i i eporieu , ',i 0i-0i«ni
betU'en v. 0 KAfilrand the iftr
inter city coiuiniiMinn.
Aye aa mi sr..ii Me believed
thai the i' 11 y siould and wduld
fully cííapenaate Keith for the
lots in cash cr In other suitable
lots
The ci innilnKion also;
Approved bills.
Mad. i wo ta* adjustments.
Tabled „ rc.i'.ies oy (.{ill Ser
• ¡nil lair catalog publisher, for
an advertlaetnoat from the city
Tabled tho rviiuest <>f Mar-
chan! Pollciiiiiiii Dave Btnndfn
that the city help merchants p4y
Ills saiiiry.
——— , ,
CMrk
in
ly. TVxas
Court
in tits* for Hutchinson Coun
oon
closer to tHe earth than It is now.
nnd, aa it continues to move away
slowl. It slowly increase ) the
#,10,17,t4 length of the lunar moi
PINE8VILLK, ().. May 17 -</P,
The larceny irlul of Frank Ora-
bowskl, 42, was continued until
June 12 because—
During a court recess, Mrs For-
rest Plnney, n Juror, wont homo
nd became the mother of twins.
I til; costly baud Insi tinenta later
on.
The program of the llorger lilgli
hand eomeri was formed with the
enjoyment nf lite audience para-
mount Numbers are selected for
appeal to varied, popular desire
in music
The program of the high school
band.
"Fc'ue and Fortune,'• march.
"Wauderor's Call," overture.
Uncntitel.
"'CornlVnt of Venice,'' cornet so.
Io with hand accompaniment by
tonuM Hope.
' American Soldier," nuirch.
The Open Country Lures Senior Scouts
MIO SCOUTS (Boy Scout, past IS 'yiitifi,
les. Back-packing trip
_ . ■■ t'ted opportunities for <
plorer program of the Boy Scouts oi Arteries.
are the best of buddies. Back-packing trips in America's mountain
®,ve unlimited^ opportunities for virile adventure in the It-
BAPTIST BODY
(Continued trom pago ONK)
troll. Mich., aud Ihe First Iliipthit
church ol Fori Worth, announced
he would conduct siparati meet-
lugH loiiiRlu through Friday as
founder and nrtnident of the
World FutidnmentnliHt MÉMonary
Baptist Fellowship
Io said he would criticl'.e ihr
nationri administration s foreign
pollcj as one designed to plunge
the nation Into wer "to (over up
PALS
Ocean minflnh Increase
weight 00 million times.
their
KMI'LOVMHNT IN
tKMM tXCIU.AMFH
Huff. | ■■
."Mardl Gris." from "The Mis- eerliln bank nipt cy."
slssippl Butte," t^ modern swing
number
"Lusisplel," overture, by sux.
'.hone qunrtel com pored of Lou-
ie Colin. Alton Kdwards, John Kv-
ntis), Tomiuic wiRgins.
"Sir Calabud," overture.
'Sax 'Uiylhtiiiitk, ' Woldoft ,-n ¡mnouu ed
tenor saxophone nolo by Hetty Lou
Hockley acrompanled by Mrs.
To;, loi
■ AC:
I light Upward trend in Texas cm-
oyment and payrolia during Ap.
UHTIN
"~"aB
May 1
l/Pi
'B
m
today by the
University of Texan bureau of
bttfinettc research
Brel^eia astabtl hments inform-1
ed the LmiTau they hud put on
l.l per rem more woiktrs th.tu
during March.
m
r^r
Mí'ii I
mnM
MB.
tit
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 151, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 17, 1939, newspaper, May 17, 1939; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth167704/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.